Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc. v. Streater

6 So. 2d 242
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 18, 1942
DocketNos. 2341, 2342.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 6 So. 2d 242 (Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc. v. Streater) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc. v. Streater, 6 So. 2d 242 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinions

These are two damage suits resulting from the same automobile collision which took place in the intersection between Hodges and Division Streets in the City of Lake Charles at about 2:45 in the afternoon of December 6, 1939. They were consolidated for trial in the Court below, separate judgments rendered in favor of the plaintiff in each case and an appeal taken by the defendants in each. They were consolidated for argument on the appeal in this Court.

The suit of Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., and Ætna Insurance Company is brought to recover the damage caused to the automobile that was being driven by Charles H. Austin, Sr., who is the plaintiff in the companion suit. The automobile was owned by Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., and was insured by the Ætna Insurance Company, the policy containing the usual $50 deductible clause. The claim of the Ætna Insurance Company is for $629.10 and that of Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., for the $50 loss sustained by it under the terms of the policy. The defendants are Mrs. Julia Streater, wife of George G. Streater, and George G. Streater himself, and the American Employers Insurance Company which carried the public liability insurance on the other automobile involved in the accident and which was being driven by Mrs. Streater.

The suit of Charles H. Austin, Sr., brought against these same defendants has for its purpose the recovery of damages for personal injuries in the sum of $14,688.30.

The allegations made in both petitions are substantially the same that are made in all damage suits involving intersectional collisions, especially in large towns and cities. It is conceded that neither of the two streets involved enjoyed a superior right by ordinance over the other but it is alleged that Hodges Street, on which the plaintiff car was travelling, is a more important street and carries considerably more traffic than Division Street on which the defendant car was proceeding. To that extent it is charged that Mrs. Streater, the driver of that car, didn't exercise due caution in approaching the intersection. She *Page 243 is also charged with failing to keep a proper lookout, failing to apply her brakes and delay the progress of her car until the other, which had entered the intersection first, could pass; in entering the intersection after it had been pre-empted by the other car; in failing to swerve her car slightly to the left in order to pass behind the car and avoid striking it; in failing to do any act to avoid striking the other car which had cleared half of the intersection before she entered; in failing to apply her brakes after striking the other car, and in continuing her speed, thus pushing it sideways and crushing it against a telephone post at the northwestern corner of the intersection.

In the first suit the American Employers Insurance Company filed its answer separately from the other two defendants in which it may be said to deny practically all the allegations of the petition and specifically charges the driver of the plaintiff car with the gross negligence which, it is averred, was the sole and proximate cause of the collision. He is charged with driving into the intersection at an excessive speed; in not looking before entering to see if any car was approaching on Division Street; with failing to have seen the Streater car which had already occupied the intersection when he entered, and in failing to bring his car to a stop before colliding with the other. In the alternative that defendant pleads that if the Court should find any negligence on the part of the driver of the plaintiff car which did not constitute the sole cause of the accident, that it did constitute a contributory cause and his contributory negligence bars the recovery of all the plaintiffs.

The answer of the defendants George G. Streater and his wife may be said to constitute also a denial of all the material allegations of the petition charging Mrs. Streater with negligence and then, in assuming the position of plaintiffs in reconvention, they set out the same charges of negligence as are made in the answer of the American Employers Insurance Company for which they claim that the driver of the plaintiff car was solely responsible for the accident and for the resulting damages sustained by them and for which they ask to recover against the owner of the car, Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., the sum of $15,000 for the personal injuries sustained by Mrs. Streater and the sum of $399.10 for expenses incurred by her husband in having her injuries attended to.

In the second suit which is that of Charles H. Austin, Sr., for damages for personal injuries sustained by him, the answer of the American Employers Insurance Company is practically the same as its answer in the first suit and so is that also of the defendants Mr. Mrs. Streater who again present a demand in reconvention for the same damages as set out by them in their other answer and who in addition make that same demand against Charles H. Austin, Sr., individually and as Vice President and General Manager of Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., to whom the automobile belonged, and also against the Globe Indemnity Company, the public liability insurer of that car.

The cases were vigorously contested and after being submitted to the district judge, he rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in each, the award in the first being for the amount claimed as there seemed to have been no dispute concerning the amount of damages to the plaintiff automobile and in the second, the award being in the sum of $4,443.92. The defendants have taken a suspensive appeal in each case.

The district judge wrote a lengthy written opinion for the record in which he analyzed the testimony according to his own conception of the facts as shown, and we might state at the very beginning that although we believe he was correct in holding Mrs. Streater guilty of negligence, we cannot agree with him that Mr. Austin was not equally as guilty, in which event of course none of the parties should recover anything.

Mr. Austin was driving the Buick coupe which belonged to Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., north on Hodges Street and Mrs. Streater was driving the Buick sedan which belonged to her husband, and to the marital community between them, we presume, west, on Division Street. Each was alone in their respective cars and outside of a witness named Max F. Marsh who claims to have been seated in an automobile parked on Hodges Street 150 feet south of the intersection were the only eyewitnesses to the accident. The district judge in order to decide the case in the way he did necessarily had to accept Mr. Austin's version of how the accident happened over that of Mrs. Streater and also to discount in its entirety the testimony of *Page 244 the witness Marsh. Why he did this we cannot very well understand unless for some reasons better known to himself he thought that Mr. Austin was a more substantial witness than Mrs. Streater and that the witness Marsh testified to matters about which he knew nothing at all.

It may be that in some respects the witness Marsh did testify to matters which he was relying more or less on his own memory, estimates and observations but to all appearances he was a thoroughly disinterested witness as he does not seem to be acquainted to any extent in Lake Charles, being a resident of Tulsa, Oklahoma. Besides that he gave his testimony by deposition and the district judge didn't have any more opportunity of observing his demeanor in the manner of testifying than do the judges of this court.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Chriceol v. Insurance Co. of North America
211 So. 2d 692 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1968)
Byers v. Creel
198 So. 2d 739 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1967)
Rachow v. Ringwald
87 So. 2d 173 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1956)
Lottinger v. Yellow Cab Co. of Shreveport
75 So. 2d 567 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1954)
Comeaux v. Blanchet
69 So. 2d 527 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1953)
New Hampshire Fire Ins. Co. v. Bush
68 So. 2d 254 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1953)
Austin v. Streater
6 So. 2d 248 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 So. 2d 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-charles-stevedores-inc-v-streater-lactapp-1942.